OxyGo India Archive: June 2025 Health and Recovery Insights

When you’re dealing with oxygen therapy, a medical treatment used to increase oxygen levels in people with breathing problems. Also known as supplemental oxygen, it’s not just for hospitals—many people use it at home after heart surgery, during chemo, or for long-term lung conditions. That’s why the June 2025 collection here at OxyGo India focuses on real-life health journeys, not just theory. You’ll find straight answers about what happens after major procedures, what drugs actually cost, and which so-called "natural" remedies might be doing more harm than good.

Behind every post is a person asking: Can I live alone after open-heart surgery? Is that herbal supplement really safe? Why can’t I kiss my partner during chemo? These aren’t random questions—they’re urgent, everyday concerns. That’s why we dug into heart surgery recovery, the process of regaining strength and independence after cardiac procedures. Also known as post-cardiac rehabilitation, it’s not just about healing the chest—it’s about rebuilding confidence, managing pain, and knowing when it’s safe to be on your own. We also looked at weight loss medication, prescription drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy that help people lose weight by affecting appetite and metabolism. Also known as GLP-1 agonists, they’re popular but expensive, confusing, and often misunderstood. People are paying hundreds out of pocket, wondering if the pill version works like the injection, or if there’s a cheaper way to get it. And then there’s the quiet crisis: herbal supplements, plant-based products sold as natural health aids. Also known as dietary herbs, they’re everywhere—but they’re not regulated like pills, and some can wreck your liver without warning. We didn’t just list risks—we showed you how to read labels, spot red flags, and talk to your doctor without sounding paranoid.

It’s not all physical. If you’ve ever felt too tired, too anxious, or just "off" but couldn’t explain why, you’re not imagining it. That’s why we included a clear guide on mental health signs you can’t ignore—things like avoiding friends, sleeping too much or too little, or losing interest in things you used to love. Therapy isn’t for "broken" people. It’s for anyone who’s been carrying weight no one sees.

What you’ll find below isn’t a list of articles. It’s a toolkit. From the hardest heart surgeries ever performed to the real cost of Wegovy without insurance, from why kissing during chemo is risky to whether CoQ10 actually helps your energy—every post answers a question someone actually asked. No fluff. No hype. Just facts, tips, and the kind of advice you’d get from a friend who’s been there.